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A UMNS Commentary
By E. Julu Swen*
July 11, 2012
The congregation of the Miller McAllister United Methodist Church in the
Ganta United Methodist Mission Compound in Liberia decided to update
the exterior of the church with cement spray over the rocks. The church
as it was before the spray is pictured on the right and after is on the
left. A UMNS web-only photo by E. Julu Swen.
My memory of Miller McAllister United Methodist Church was shattered when I reached the Ganta United Methodist Mission Compound, the official grounds that host the church, which was established in 1926.
I struggled all that day trying to find the natural stone building
of the church that represented a piece of the history of The United
Methodist Church and of the community of Ganta.
Instead I kept seeing a cement-sprayed ash-gray structure.
The church was established in 1926 by Dr. George Way Harley from the
United States. Harley was a member of the Edenton Street United
Methodist Church in Raleigh, N.C. Attendance at worship usually is
between 250 and 300.
The building of a church in Ganta was said to be the culmination of
Harley's work in Liberia. It took many years to build the church
because of a shortage of funds and pressing demands for other
buildings.
The church was completed in 1950 and was named Miller McAllister
Memorial United Methodist Church, after the largest contributors of
funds to the building project, Charles Miller and Agnes McAllister.
Miller was a devoted Methodist layman; McAllister was a gallant young
missionary among the Kru people in Garraway in the 1890s. No one knows
what the church was called before that.
Troubled, I decided to try to find out more.
E. Julu Swen
The Rev. James Z. Labala, district superintendent of Gompa
District, who was once pastor of Miller McAllister, provided some
background.
“I spent five years debating with my congregation on the need to
preserve the building as it has been for the past 60 years, but they
won the argument,” he said. Others complained that the stones were
uneven, he said, and took away the beauty of the church.
Members of the church wanted the church plastered with cement to
conceal the natural stony look. He said the compromise decision was to
spray instead of plastering with thick concrete.
“As a matter of fact, there are some members who want the church
reroofed with zinc instead of maintaining the present clay tile roof,”
Labala said.
I approached a group of church members who were cleaning around the
church before the funeral for the Rev. Herbert Zigbuo, a missionary for
the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries who was superintendent
of Ganta for many years. Labala had told me in our earlier discussion
that Zigbuo was one of those who supported him in his drive to preserve
this piece of history.
I asked indirectly why the church was sprayed with cement.
“We want to get rid of the old look of the church,” a young lady said to me. “We are in modern days now,” another responded.
Trying not to judge as wrongdoers those who I thought were in the
process of defacing the church, I asked Labala, who is also a graduate
of the University of Liberia with a degree in architecture, if the
60-year-old building posed any danger to the congregation.
“Not in another 50 years’ time,” he said.
As I wrote this piece, thinking I needed to capture the attention of
those who would want to rescue this piece of history, I saw visible
cracks in the walls and sunlight streaming through the roof, which
suggested that water also pours down on the congregation during the
rainy season.
Then I told myself that these folks may be right by saying “away with the old.”
I also realized a new campaign of “generational change” was about to enter the church.
I decided to ask Labala about the cost of changing the roof to zinc, which is what some of his members were suggesting.
“It will cost us U.S. $14,000 to keep the clay roof and probably the
same amount or more even if we decide to use zinc,” Labala said.
The cost of preserving would be high but the impact of erasing it
would be more devastating to those of us who value history so much.
But, I also realized that “away with the old” is not just a campaign
of wanting to change the appearance of the Miller McAllister Memorial
United Methodist Church. It is also a way to make sure that the church
looks forward into the next century.
*Swen is a journalist, transitional justice worker, and former
inquiry officer for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Liberia.
He is director of communications for the United Methodist Church in
Liberia.
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